Judicial Transformations
The Rights Revolution in the Courts of Europe
Lasser, Mitchel de S.-O.-l'E.,
Jack G. Clarke Professor of Law, Cornell Law School
Print publication date: 2009
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2009 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-957077-5 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199570775.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
Fundamental rights are exploding across all areas of law in Europe. This rights revolution is transforming European judicial culture and the judge's political role at breakneck speed. Not only have fundamental rights become an integral part of litigation in the domestic and European courts, but their advent has provoked an ongoing revolution in French and European procedural, doctrinal, institutional, and conceptual structures. Grounded in comparative law and political science, this book tells the story of the rights revolution. Part of the story is social and intellectual. As the polity has become increasingly complicated both nationally and transnationally, fundamental rights have emerged as a lingua franca within and across European jurisdictions: they offer a pool of common legal terms that address the diversity of interests now litigating in the domestic and European courts. But that is not the entire story. The fundamental rights revolution is also a product of the complex — and often competitive — inter-institutional dynamics that characterize the judicial arena in our ever more globalized legal space. European legal controversies increasingly play out at the jurisdictional intersection of a range of domestic and supranational high courts, which must interact and coordinate as never before. This growing inter-institutional interface has taken on a competitive logic and inflationary force of its own. The result has been a group dynamic that has reinforced the ubiquity and preeminence of fundamental rights throughout the European legal field. Almost every European judicial player now faces powerful pressures to jump on the fundamental rights bandwagon or be left intellectually and institutionally behind. This has prompted a frantic race to master and lead the emergent fundamental rights regime.
Keywords: rights revolution, judicial culture, domestic courts, European courts, legal controversies, Europe Table of Contents
Chapter 1.
Introduction
Chapter 2.
Entrenched Structures and Meanings
Chapter 3.
External Pressures on the Inside (I): The New Individual Rights Regime
Chapter 4.
External Pressures on the Inside (II): The ECHR's ‘Fair Trial’ Jurisprudence
Chapter 5.
Internal Pressures on the Inside (I): The Redoubtable Trio
Chapter 6.
Internal Pressures on the Inside (II): The Opposition
Chapter 7.
Inside Pressures on the Outside: The Domestic Interpretive Construction of European Law
Chapter 8.
External Pressures on the Outside: Constructing a Familiar European Judicial Order
Chapter 9.
Pre-Conclusion: Major Shifts or Minor Adjustments?
Chapter 10.
Reassessment: Judicial Orders in Flux
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
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